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Looking to do the traverse in February in one day, including Jackson. I have done it in one day to Clinton, carrying all my water, and have done it many years ago over four days where our stove stopped working. We didn't find any water at Greenborough Spring, but were saved by a seep on the other side of the Lakes of the Clouds.

Looking to go super light so finding water would be helpful.

Thanks,

Ward

« Last Edit: January 29, 2013, 08:46:09 AM by eyebolter »

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DLottmann

All sources above tree-line in February are HIGHLY unreliable to non-existent.

I would carry a Jet Boil for a one-day. Hydrate like crazy the day before (and on the drive to trailhead) and I would carry 2 32 oz water bottles + Jet Boil. One full can of fuel should be enough... that doesn’t weigh much and will let you re-supply almost anywhere...

DLottmann

Just bringing to a boil for a few seconds is enough... though I would probably risk it with pure snow above tree-line for a one day ascent... shouldn’t be any bacteria in there... but ya never know.... watch out for charmin flowers and don’t collect snow near them!

Beavers and people, that is all you need to remember Soon. I drink out of springs and seasonal streams in Massachusetts all the time, no worries as long as there are no beavers, and no people shitting above you. Of course in the Presidentials no people shitting above you is pretty hard...

Yes, like I said the last time I did it in one day (except Jackson) we carried all our water. The previous time we were melting water but we had 50 pounds of gear or more. A stove isn't usually in my day kit but D-man is right, it is lighter than carrying the extra water. I'm thinking going lean on the water (2-3 liters) and hoping to find some, but having the stove as a backup.

Wouldn't you want a stove up there anyway? I wouldn't think of going anywhere very far in the winter without my Jetboil in case something happens unexpected and you get stuck longer than planned. At least you can make tea to hydrate and warm yourself up. If you get really stuck you can always cut your buddy's frozen toes off and make a soup.

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"Do not go where the path may lead, go instead where there is not a path and leave a trail."

Wouldn't you want a stove up there anyway? I wouldn't think of going anywhere very far in the winter without my Jetboil in case something happens unexpected and you get stuck longer than planned. At least you can make tea to hydrate and warm yourself up. If you get really stuck you can always cut your buddy's frozen toes off and make a soup.

You could stick a handwarmer next to the canister while it is packed in the pot and I would have a lighter in case the little starter is not enough to get it going. I am pretty sure I have used it well below 20 deg with no problem and that people have used them on Everest, but I will defer to others on that. Not sure if it does anything, but I shake the canister before sticking the stove on.

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"Do not go where the path may lead, go instead where there is not a path and leave a trail."

I have used my jet boil below 20F and it works well. It just takes a bit longer to boil and is more affected by the wind so i use heavy duty aluminum foil as a wind screen. I have also found that sno peake fuel works best in cold weather.